The Economic Cost of Intimate Partner Violence: Implications for Prevention

The American Journal of Preventive Medicine has released new research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on the lifetime economic burden of intimate partner violence among adults in the United States. Following CDC’s “Lifetime Economic Burden of Rape Among U.S. Adults,” this new study takes into account medical costs, lost productivity, criminal justice activities, and other costs such as victim property loss or damage. Understanding the costs of violence can help build the case for prevention. On this webinar, presenters from PreventConnect, the National Resource Center on Domestic Violence (NRCDV), and CDC explored the long-term economic cost of intimate partner violence and implications for prevention policy and practice.

Adequate self-care is vital to sustaining long-lasting careers as a victim advocates. In NRCDV's upcoming webinar, Vanessa Timmons will discuss strategies for managing work related stress and addressing the emotional and physical toll of compassion fatigue.

The separate identities of mother and advocate are naturally intertwined, but have never been as integrated for mother advocates then at this very moment. This Mother’s Day, NRCDV honors the resilience of mother advocates in the movement to end domestic violence.